I have a modest wine collection in a section of my basement which is about 64 degree (f) year-round. Last evening I found a small (dime size) puddle under the neck of a day-to-day sparkling wine that has been in the rack for a couple of years. The puddle was a stickly almost black substance; reminded me of molasses. The neck of the bottle on the bottom was sticky as well. I removed the foil. There was about 1/4 of a teaspoon of the sticky mass collected in the top of the foil and there are spots of mold/mildew growing around the lip of the bottle where it meets the cork.
Can anyone tell me whats happening here? (In advance, thanks. BTW: This is my first post on this forum so I apologize if I have done something incorrectly.

Dan Shumate wrote:Can anyone tell me whats happening here? (In advance, thanks. BTW: This is my first post on this forum so I apologize if I have done something incorrectly.

Greetings, Dan. Welcome aboard. There's not much you can do incorrectly here but, if you do, Robin will simply come after your with rabid attack dogs and angry mothers-in-law. That's for the first error. I've never seen anyone survive to make a second.

As to your question, you got me beat. It does, however, sound like all the goop and mold was external to the bottle leading me to speculate that the source was also external. Were the contents in any way affected?

I have seen the mould and gunk a few times. The mould I am not worried about as I think it has something to do with humidity and the fact that the caps/foil go on later before sending out from the winery. The other point about the gunk is probably due to seepage but we need a scientist to explain the reaction to air/whatever. Just my guess!!!

Bob Parsons Alberta. wrote:I have seen the mould and gunk a few times. The mould I am not worried about as I think it has something to do with humidity and the fact that the caps/foil go on later before sending out from the winery. The other point about the gunk is probably due to seepage but we need a scientist to explain the reaction to air/whatever. Just my guess!!!

Welcome Dan!

I agree with Bob, I would think it has something to do with your humidity. Do you have a hygrometer? You temperature may be perfect, but your humidity may be up in the 90% and up. Mold and mildew thrive on those conditions... Also, be careful with that stuff, it may look harmless, but it can be dangerous to your health if you breathe it in.

Dan,
Welcome to the forum. Bob gives the sagest advice available. He is the original and best "wine guru" in my book. Any advice he gives you can take to the bank. Of course you will get lots of other great advice too.

I'm a big fan of the passive cellar where you can guarantee that constant temp. btwn. 55 and 65. It does sound like you might have a humidity problem. Is there mold anywhere else in the basement? A dehumidifier might do the trick.

In the meantime, I would be careful. Molds can be bad stuff as you have been told. Good luck. I hope everything turns out well.
Cheers!
James

As to the contents, I haven't opened the bottle (yet!) so I don't know how the wine is effected, if at all.
As to being caused by outside elements, I don't think so. The molasses was inside the foil on the bottom (as the bottle lay) and it was the only bottle (of many) that was effected. Also, the bottle was on one of the lowest racks and there was nothing on other bottles above it.
I'm guessing seepage and fermentation/evaporation but that is purely a guess.
And why is it dark? Perhap pigment from the foil leaching?

Dan Shumate wrote:As to the contents, I haven't opened the bottle (yet!) so I don't know how the wine is effected, if at all. As to being caused by outside elements, I don't think so. The molasses was inside the foil on the bottom (as the bottle lay) and it was the only bottle (of many) that was effected. Also, the bottle was on one of the lowest racks and there was nothing on other bottles above it.I'm guessing seepage and fermentation/evaporation but that is purely a guess. And why is it dark? Perhap pigment from the foil leaching?

Two possibilities: either seepage or residue that was left on the cork from the bottling line. Whatever residual sugar that is in the wine becomes that petrified gunk, and it is dark because when things are exposed to oxygen they turn brown.

If it is from seepage, like Bob's experience, the wine is likely shot, and the fill level would be lower than normal. If it is from residue from the bottling line, the wine could be unaffected. Only one way to find out...

Thank you. Sage advise.
We leave on vacation in a couple of days. I think I'll chill this bottle (and another one just in case) and open it the day we leave.
I'll let you know the condition of the wine.